After dropping my electric bills by quite a lump by installing solar panels ive now ordered a wood burner to see if i can get my heating bills down too. Its going to cost me just short of £500 and will be installed in october with defra certficate to burn wood. So far ive collected 3 van loads of driftwood from the beach which should last me a few months. Will put photos up when it gets installed.
trappa

Snap, we've just bought two. One for downstairs with an oven, and one to heat the spare room where we do crafting and to keep the rest of the upstairs above freezing. The Prity factory is just down the road so the two only cost about £400. But we had to collect them which was interesting, a middle aged man and arthritic wife.

A bit off the post, but these solar panels, do they just heat up hot water or do they do other things as well, we use about 900 units of electric every two months admittedly the oh uses some in his workshop running lights and a few machines

That was a good price tosca!
Doofa- My 2.2KW system cost just under 6k (its cheaper now) and has dropped the electric bills by about a third. With a teenage son and daughter we tend to use the majority of electric on an evening which cant be helped i guess.
On the plus side, although our electric bills have dropped a third in actual size, we get money for every kilowatt we produce and because we were in the first batch we receive just under 50p a kilowatt, which last year equated to just under a thousand pound we received from the electric company, this year we are on target to get just over a thousand, which, when put towards our electric equates to us not paying a penny for our electric- which is nice
Digger- The panels we got are electric panels, not the thermal ones, so we still need to source our heating of hot water from the gas company.
After the wood burner gets installed im not sure what my next challenge will be. I may look at saving up for solar thermal panels for my garage roof to help with hot water or possibly look at rainwater harvesting. Need to work out actual costs against future savings to see which will be more beneficial.
Trappa

25 year payback. Looking at 25k coming back to me for installing the panels plus bills cut by a third.
I'm hoping to at least half my gas bill with the woodburner, possibly by two thirds over winter. I live near woods so should have an inexhaustible supply.

Dave. I think I made a boo boo! Cheers for that, looks like I've got a ton if driftwood for the chimnea instead!!!! I reckon I can still burn a lot of it mind, we were hit with localised flooding and a lot had only reached the beach within 24 hours of me collecting it. Google saltburn flooding.
Real shame I can't use proper driftwood mind, could get a fair amount regularly :-(

I googled it and the advice seems to be that burning it will produce dioxins owning to the presence of chlorine which of course is part of the salt. Would it be possible to leech the salt out by leaving the driftwood in the rain or better still a river ? Looking at how long the Mary Rose's timbers were sprayed maybe not but others may have some ideas. I also seem to recall the habit of throwing a handful of salt on a fire to prevent or is that extingush a chimney fire.
Personally being inland I tend to find more than an abundant supply available in skips.

People have been burning driftwood for centuries, most of them are dead mind!

*seriously, go for it! ( That's just my opinion, and you'll be better off following the others advice)

Millymollymandy wrote:Bloody smilies, always being used. I hate them and they should be banned.
No I won't use a smiley because I've decided to turn into Boboff, as he's turned all nice all of a sudden. Grumble grumble.

tosca wrote:Snap, we've just bought two. One for downstairs with an oven, and one to heat the spare room where we do crafting and to keep the rest of the upstairs above freezing. The Prity factory is just down the road so the two only cost about £400. But we had to collect them which was interesting, a middle aged man and arthritic wife.

Is this the Prity stove you bought? Looks like it from the pic on your blog:

The one in the kitchen/sitting room has an oven and we plan to keep a kettle on top for washing up and washing the floor. No central heating, we don't want it unless we have to, and no hot water as it would mean too much disruption to change everything. We have a boiler in each shower room and one does the kitchen sink too. They don't really cost much to run.

And the one in the larger bedroom in which we have now put all our arty crafty stuff ready for when we are confined to the house. We can sleep in there if it gets too bitter, but really it should keep the rest of the upstairs above freezing.